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Five years on, the monster image has become the signature design of Harry’s successful fashion label, Forty Clothing – and he will always be grateful for his son’s artistic talent.

The 45-year-old, who opened his flagship Forty store in Royal Exchange Square, Glasgow, said: “I’ll never forget coming home late from work one night and lying on the floor was this drawing Bryce had done of the most amazing monster.

“He was only three at the time and I just couldn’t believe the detail he had put in – such precision.

“Most kids at that age would have been drawing stickmen, if you were lucky, and scribbles.

“One of my friends, Peter Love, who is a graphic designer, said, ‘That would make a good T-shirt’, and so the seed was planted.”

At the time, Harry juggled his performances as one of Scotland’s top DJs with his day job as part of the menswear buying team at fashion chain Cruise.

Approaching 40, he was at a turning point in his life and was looking for a career change.

Harry, who regularly performed at T in the Park, said: “I loved working in fashion but I’d been with Cruise for 19 years, the company had changed ownership and I was at a point in my life where I was thinking, ‘Is this who I am?’

“My friend Peter’s comment about making a T-shirt with Bryce’s drawing stuck in my head.

“I didn’t do anything about it for a while, then one day I was getting ready for DJ-ing that night and started to think about what I would wear. There was a wee place in Hamilton I knew of that printed T-shirts, so I asked if they could put Bryce’s drawing on a T-shirt for me.

“The image was exactly as Bryce had drawn it. I didn’t change a thing.

“That night, it felt like every single person asked me about my T-shirt, who designed it and where they could get one.

“I don’t believe in coincidences – I’d started looking for a new job and then this opportunity had presented itself.

“I spoke to Peter, who knew all the technical side of things about what font would work best and things like that. Everything just felt right and fell into place.”

Harry quickly placed an order for more T-shirts to be made. As his venture grew, he was given an ultimatum by his bosses that he should either work for them or run his own business.

He said: “I remember going home to my wife Kelly in December 2013 and asking her if she had bought everything we needed for Christmas because I had just given up my job. It was scary, but I have no regrets.”

With the support of his family, including Bryce, now nine, and daughter Blaire, six, Harry officially launched Forty Clothing.

They started a pop-up shop in the basement of a hairdressers in Glasgow.

Harry said: “It had no heating and I had to set up disco lights. But by that time we had put the design on maybe 20 different garments, and there had been so much interest from people we knew and on social media that by the end of our run we had nearly sold out all our products.

“That’s when I realised this dream could really happen.”

Bryce has always supported dad Harry's fashion label which has his design as its logo (Image: Daily Record)

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The company now manufacture all their own designs. Their high-quality fashion, described as stylish streetwear with an edge, has made them one of Scotland’s most talked about brands.

They produce men’s, unisex and children’s clothing.

Forty have been nominated for a number of top fashion awards and are on the brink of expanding across Europe.

They have been involved in a number of high-profile collaborations, including with Digital Groove Records, Hancock VA Jackets, Space Ibiza and DJ Carl Cox.

Their most recent collaboration was with Glasgow festival Piping Live, who asked Forty to design a bag cover for bagpipes. The bag carries a hidden mental health message, which can only be seen when a photo is taken of it with a flash, to support the festival’s charity partners, the Scottish Association of Mental Health.

Harry said the cause is close to his heart, adding: “Bryce was recently diagnosed with dyslexia and, while that is not a mental illness, it is a condition that can cause lots of insecurities and anxieties, and that’s not something I want him to go through because that’s not good for a person’s mental health.”

The proud dad added: “Because of his dyslexia, he might struggle with numbers and letters, but even as a very young lad he was expressing himself through art – as shown by the amazing monster picture.

“When people hear a child is dyslexic, there is a tendency for them to say, ‘That’s a shame’. But that implies that dyslexia is some kind of failing – and that’s wrong. People should celebrate everything about them that makes them who they are.

“Some people might see things in a different way from others, but that’s not a failure and it certainly doesn’t mean there is anything wrong with them.

“We all have insecurities and anxieties. What is important is that we are not afraid to open up and talk about what is going on our in heads.

“When people come into our store we always ask, ‘How are you today?’, and we really mean it.”